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Thread started 02/28/09 6:39pm

lazycrockett

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PAUL HARVEY IS DEAD

http://www.usatoday.com/l...obit_N.htm

Radio legend Paul Harvey, whose news and commentary segments always ended with his distinctive sign-off, "Paul Harvey....good day," died today at the age of 90, ABC Radio Network reported Saturday.

He died Saturday at his winter home in Phoenix, surrounded by family, network spokesman Louis Adams said. No cause of death was immediately available.

Harvey never viewed himself as a newsman, even though some 18 million people tuned into his daily reports to hear his 15-minute take on the day's events.

"I'm a professional parade watcher who can't wait to get out of bed every morning and rush down to the teletypes to pan for gold," he told CNN's Larry King in 1988.

That he did with a vengeance since those teletype days in 1951, arriving at his Chicago studio in the pre-dawn hours to produce two news and commentary segments and his evening The Rest of the Story (written by his son, Paul) which were carried on some 1,100 radio stations and 400 Armed Forces Radio Network stations.

He based himself in Chicago, flew aboard his Lear jet to give corporate speeches and commuted by limo each day from his 27-room home in suburban River Forest, Ill., to his 16th floor studio above a street sign that reads Paul Harvey Drive.

When Harvey was 81 in 2000, his sole employer for all those years, ABC Radio Networks, signed him to a 10-year, $100 million contract. Rivals who had lost in the bidding told him they'd be back in 2010.

Harvey's ability to sell products in advertisements, via spots that read and which flowed seamlessly from his news stories, were legendary. He is considered the greatest radio salesman of all time and sponsors — only one in 15 were accepted — were required to sign on for at least a year.

"I can't look down on the commercial sponsors of these broadcasts," he told CBS in 1988. "Too often they have very, very important messages to put across. Without advertising in this country, my goodness, we'd still be in this country what Russia mostly still is: a nation of bearded cyclists with b.o."

The idea of retirement never occured to either Harvey or his wife, Angel, whom he married in 1940 and who was his producing partner throughout his career.

"I've got an old country boy's philosophy," he told The Chicago Tribune in a 2002 interview. "When the car's running, you don't look inside the carburator. Just keep rolling."

He got his start in radio in high school in Tulsa at age 14 when a speech teacher was so impressed with his voice that she took him to a local radio station, KVOO-AM and told the program director that Harvey belonegd on radio.

He began reading news, making announcements — and sweeping floors — and a year later began getting paid."It is impossible in print to capture the rhythm and flow of his delivery, a series of pauases, dramatic and playful inflections that combine to create somethng like a piece of perfomance art, a verbal telegraph," writer Rock Kogan wrote in his Tribune profile.

The conservative label attached itself to Harvey, a God-and country advocate who called welfare recipients "pusillanimous parasites." He supported Sen. Joe McCathy's tactics in the early 50s.

Critics blasted him during the tumultuous Vietnam War years in the 60s and 70s, but he made one of his most famous flip-flops on that war, declaring on the air to President Nixon: "Mr. President, I love you but you are wrong."

But unlike partisan radio hosts such as Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly, Harvey's appeal was "that he did not represent any kind of movement, not any kind of format," said Michael Harrison, editor of Talkers magazine, a radio trade publication. "He just represented himself and that is highest compliment and highest form broadcasting: when you are successful for just who you are and for being there so long."

Tom Taylor, editor of Inside Radio, said that Harvey was "like the oldest and still the tallest redwood in the whole forest, a living reminder of the power of words on the radio — and of silence. Most talent in radio rushes to fill 'dead air' but Paul understood the value of the right pause at the right time. You'd sometimes literally hold your breath to see what 'the rest.. .of the story' was.

Harvey was the quintessential radio broadcaster, Taylor said.

"Paul had absolutely no equal when it came to the sheer art of how to use a radio microphone, and several generations of radio newspeople studied his delivery," Taylor said. "He tried television but it wasn't his medium. Radio was, and he owned it. When Paul was speaking, how could you not listen, even if you disagreed with his commentary?"
The Most Important Thing In Life Is Sincerity....Once You Can Fake That, You Can Fake Anything.
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Reply #1 posted 02/28/09 6:46pm

Mach

I Loved listening to his show - from my childhood on ...


RIP rose
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Reply #2 posted 02/28/09 6:47pm

ThreadBare

I think his wife died within the past year or so. I figured it might not be long. You know how older, long-married couples can be. sad

I'll miss him.
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Reply #3 posted 02/28/09 6:54pm

hokie

I remember him from when I was a kid. My parents used to listen to his show.


sad

He lived a long life though. rose
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Reply #4 posted 02/28/09 6:58pm

meow85

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Mach said:

I Loved listening to his show - from my childhood on ...


RIP rose

Aaw, me too. sad
"A Watcher scoffs at gravity!"
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Reply #5 posted 02/28/09 6:58pm

Lammastide

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I always enjoyed his commentaries. This obit cuts him some slack: I think he did become not just "conservative," but partisan in later years -- but I always did enjoy (even if I didn't agree with) his sort of old-fashioned conventional wisdom. He was like a slightly annoying, but beloved, grandpa.
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #6 posted 02/28/09 7:12pm

7e7e7

lazycrockett said:

http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/2009-02-28-paul-havey-obit_N.htm

Radio legend Paul Harvey, whose news and commentary segments always ended with his distinctive sign-off, "Paul Harvey....good day," died today at the age of 90, ABC Radio Network reported Saturday.

He died Saturday at his winter home in Phoenix, surrounded by family, network spokesman Louis Adams said. No cause of death was immediately available.

Harvey never viewed himself as a newsman, even though some 18 million people tuned into his daily reports to hear his 15-minute take on the day's events.

"I'm a professional parade watcher who can't wait to get out of bed every morning and rush down to the teletypes to pan for gold," he told CNN's Larry King in 1988.

That he did with a vengeance since those teletype days in 1951, arriving at his Chicago studio in the pre-dawn hours to produce two news and commentary segments and his evening The Rest of the Story (written by his son, Paul) which were carried on some 1,100 radio stations and 400 Armed Forces Radio Network stations.

He based himself in Chicago, flew aboard his Lear jet to give corporate speeches and commuted by limo each day from his 27-room home in suburban River Forest, Ill., to his 16th floor studio above a street sign that reads Paul Harvey Drive.

When Harvey was 81 in 2000, his sole employer for all those years, ABC Radio Networks, signed him to a 10-year, $100 million contract. Rivals who had lost in the bidding told him they'd be back in 2010.

Harvey's ability to sell products in advertisements, via spots that read and which flowed seamlessly from his news stories, were legendary. He is considered the greatest radio salesman of all time and sponsors — only one in 15 were accepted — were required to sign on for at least a year.

"I can't look down on the commercial sponsors of these broadcasts," he told CBS in 1988. "Too often they have very, very important messages to put across. Without advertising in this country, my goodness, we'd still be in this country what Russia mostly still is: a nation of bearded cyclists with b.o."

The idea of retirement never occured to either Harvey or his wife, Angel, whom he married in 1940 and who was his producing partner throughout his career.

"I've got an old country boy's philosophy," he told The Chicago Tribune in a 2002 interview. "When the car's running, you don't look inside the carburator. Just keep rolling."

He got his start in radio in high school in Tulsa at age 14 when a speech teacher was so impressed with his voice that she took him to a local radio station, KVOO-AM and told the program director that Harvey belonegd on radio.

He began reading news, making announcements — and sweeping floors — and a year later began getting paid."It is impossible in print to capture the rhythm and flow of his delivery, a series of pauases, dramatic and playful inflections that combine to create somethng like a piece of perfomance art, a verbal telegraph," writer Rock Kogan wrote in his Tribune profile.

The conservative label attached itself to Harvey, a God-and country advocate who called welfare recipients "pusillanimous parasites." He supported Sen. Joe McCathy's tactics in the early 50s.

Critics blasted him during the tumultuous Vietnam War years in the 60s and 70s, but he made one of his most famous flip-flops on that war, declaring on the air to President Nixon: "Mr. President, I love you but you are wrong."

But unlike partisan radio hosts such as Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly, Harvey's appeal was "that he did not represent any kind of movement, not any kind of format," said Michael Harrison, editor of Talkers magazine, a radio trade publication. "He just represented himself and that is highest compliment and highest form broadcasting: when you are successful for just who you are and for being there so long."

Tom Taylor, editor of Inside Radio, said that Harvey was "like the oldest and still the tallest redwood in the whole forest, a living reminder of the power of words on the radio — and of silence. Most talent in radio rushes to fill 'dead air' but Paul understood the value of the right pause at the right time. You'd sometimes literally hold your breath to see what 'the rest.. .of the story' was.

Harvey was the quintessential radio broadcaster, Taylor said.

"Paul had absolutely no equal when it came to the sheer art of how to use a radio microphone, and several generations of radio newspeople studied his delivery," Taylor said. "He tried television but it wasn't his medium. Radio was, and he owned it. When Paul was speaking, how could you not listen, even if you disagreed with his commentary?"


when a company is willing to pay you 100 million dollars for 15 minutes of your time per day at 81 years old... THEN you have a legacy! smile

cheers!
~svns even
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Reply #7 posted 02/28/09 8:05pm

RodeoSchro

Wow. He was a true American icon. Thank God for his time here on Earth.

He will be missed.
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Reply #8 posted 02/28/09 8:39pm

RenHoek

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moderator

I'm gonna miss that dude! I loved listening to his show all the time with my dad...

"This is Paul Harvey...






























...Good Day!"

rose
A working class Hero is something to be ~ Lennon
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Reply #9 posted 02/28/09 8:56pm

errant

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I'm very saddened by this. I've been listening to a tribute to him on the radio for the last 4 hours by local Chicago radio personalities who knew him professionally and personally.

I've realized there has barely been a day in my life that I have not listened to this man deliver the news or a "Rest of the Story"

Beautiful soul, beautiful voice, beautiful storyteller. He was the last of his kind in radio. I'm going to miss that relaxing tone and meter every day at lunch.

A great man and a great broadcaster. R.I.P. pray


PS, if you want to hear some excellent interviews from throughout the evening, go to wgnradio.com. I'm sure it'll be up as podcasts soon and on iTunes (Nick Digilio).

Or if you're in Chicago, turn on 720 AM and hear the rest of the show that's on now until midnight getting commentary and remembrances from those who knew him well. At midnight, they're running the ABC radio network tribute.
"does my cock look fat in these jeans?"
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Reply #10 posted 02/28/09 9:17pm

july

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Reply #11 posted 02/28/09 10:18pm

Vendetta1

Peace to his soul. pray
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Reply #12 posted 02/28/09 10:47pm

EmeraldSkies

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That's really sad. sad My Dad listens to his show,and whenever I am in the car with him,I always found his "The Rest Of The Story" segments very interesing. RIP Mr. Harvey. pray
Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach
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Reply #13 posted 03/01/09 4:07am

7e7e7

Lammastide said:

I always enjoyed his commentaries. This obit cuts him some slack: I think he did become not just "conservative," but partisan in later years -- but I always did enjoy (even if I didn't agree with) his sort of old-fashioned conventional wisdom. He was like a slightly annoying, but beloved, grandpa.


con⋅serv⋅a⋅tive
   /kənˈsɜrvətɪv/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [kuhn-sur-vuh-tiv] Show IPA
–adjective
1. disposed to preserve existing conditions, institutions, etc., or to restore traditional ones, and to limit change.
2. cautiously moderate or purposefully low: a conservative estimate.
3. traditional in style or manner; avoiding novelty or showiness: conservative suit.
4. (often initial capital letter) of or pertaining to the Conservative party.
5. (initial capital letter) of, pertaining to, or characteristic of Conservative Jews or Conservative Judaism.
6. having the power or tendency to conserve; preservative.
7. Mathematics. (of a vector or vector function) having curl equal to zero; irrotational; lamellar.
–noun
8. a person who is conservative in principles, actions, habits, etc.
9. a supporter of conservative political policies.
10. (initial capital letter) a member of a conservative political party, esp. the Conservative party in Great Britain.
11. a preservative.

par⋅ti⋅san
1   /ˈpɑrtəzən, -sən; Brit. ˌpɑrtəˈzæn/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [pahr-tuh-zuhn, -suhn; Brit. pahr-tuh-zan] Show IPA
–noun
1. an adherent or supporter of a person, group, party, or cause, esp. a person who shows a biased, emotional allegiance.
2. Military. a member of a party of light or irregular troops engaged in harassing an enemy, esp. a member of a guerrilla band engaged in fighting or sabotage against an occupying army.
–adjective
3. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of partisans; partial to a specific party, person, etc.: partisan politics.
4. of, pertaining to, or carried on by military partisans or guerrillas.

cheers!
~svn seven
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Reply #14 posted 03/01/09 9:41am

applekisses

Mach said:

I Loved listening to his show - from my childhood on ...


RIP rose


Me too. But, wow, what an incredible life he had. He will be mised rose
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